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Restoring touch through electrodes implanted in the human brain will require engineering around a sensory lag

  • Written by David Caldwell, Neurological Surgery Resident, University of California, San Francisco
Restoring touch through electrodes implanted in the human brain will require engineering around a sensory lagThe brain responds differently to natural touch on a finger versus a direct electrical stimulation.Sebastian Kaulitzki/Science Photo Library

More than 5 million people in the United States are affected by limb loss or paralysis. Technological devices that directly interact with the brain, known as brain-computer interfaces, offer the potential to...

Read more: Restoring touch through electrodes implanted in the human brain will require engineering around a...

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